Abstract

Topological line defects are ubiquitous in nature and appear at all physical scales, including in condensed matter systems, nuclear physics, and cosmology. Particularly useful systems to study line defects are nematic liquid crystals (LCs), where they describe singular or nonsingular frustrations in orientational order and are referred to as disclinations. In nematic LCs, line defects could be relatively simply created, manipulated, and observed. We consider cases where disclinations are stabilized either topologically in plane-parallel confinements or by chirality. In the former case, we report on studies in which defect core transformations are investigated, the intriguing dynamics of strength disclinations in LCs exhibiting negative dielectric anisotropy, and stabilization and manipulation of assemblies of defects. For the case of chiral nematics, we consider nanoparticle-driven stabilization of defect lattices. The resulting line defect assemblies could pave the way to several applications in photonics, sensitive detectors, and information storage devices. These excitations, moreover, have numerous analogs in other branches of physics. Studying their universal properties in nematics could deepen understanding of several phenomena, which are still unresolved at the fundamental level.

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